The Positives of Pledge
By Clint Schroeder
In my 30-plus years of being involved in stewardship programming across
the United States, Canada, and the Caribbean, I have heard a lot of
comments about pledging. Many were negative.
Let me proclaim the positives of pledging:
Pledging is spiritual
Pledging is discipline
Pledging is practical
Giving the first fruits
Whether we call it a pledge, a commitment, an intent, or something
else, it all comes down to the same thing: a statement that a
proportionate share of our monetary resources is to be given for the
proclamation of the Gospel. It says that our Christian giving is not only
on a par with everything else in our household budget, but indeed is at
the top of the list! We want to give the first fruits for the Lord’s work!
Pledging is spiritual because a decision is reached only after
prayerful consideration. Our giving is more a spiritual decision than a
financial one.
Pledging is faith in action. If we view pledging only as a financial
decision we miss the point. In the offertory prayer we say, "we offer
with joy and thanksgiving what you have first given us ...." If we truly
mean that, there should be no difficulty in pledging to return a portion
of that which has first been given to us.
Good discipline is essential
Pledging is discipline. Good discipline is essential to good management,
or stewardship, of our resources. We know how much the mortgage payment
is, or the payment on the car loan. We know how much we spend on life
insurance, car maintenance, groceries . . . the list goes on. Why
shouldn’t we know what we are going to give to our church? Our pledge says
something about where our priorities are.
Writing the first check each week or each month for our offering is
good discipline, and helps us to be better stewards.
Pledging essential for planning
Pledging is practical. Pledging is good money management. It’s also
practical for our congregation. It lets the finance committee and
congregation council know the amount of resources which will be available
for ministry. Pledging by members enables the congregation to do sound
planning. Pledging enables the congregation to make a meaningful pledge to
synod and churchwide ministry support.
Pledging: It’s spiritual; it’s discipline; it’s practical! It’s
good stewardship.
Clint Schroeder wrote this for Faith in Action, of which he was editor.